"miamicuse" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>I have a LinksysBEFW1114 Wireless router. The router is connected to my DSL
>modem.
>
>In my household we have three laptops, I have one for work, my wife has one
>for work and my son has one for school. We all carry the laptop out during
>the day and bring them back during the evenings and weekends. We do not
>have a steady desktop anywhere.
>
>I have wired the house to have three lines of CAT5 cable and are all
>connected to the router, but they are hardly used since we are so mobile and
>often time use the laptop at a different location.
>
>I have two questions.
>
>(1) Our three laptops never communicate. We never had a need to, when we
>need to transfer a document or a photo, we typically just email each other.
>But I was wondering whether it is possible to have the laptops "see" each
>other while being on and connected. Do I need to have a dedicated desktop
>set up with a server to do that or is there a way to do this with three
>floating laptop and one wired/wireless router?
All of the laptops (or actually I should say all wireless
clients) can see each other. Hence whatever builtin
internetworking facilities you have will work, and it can work
with a mix of Operating Systems too (e.g., Apple, Linux, or
Windows).
The one problem is that you are almost certainly using
dynamically assigned IP addresses, and hence the address is
different each time you connect. And that probably means the
first one connected on any given day gets the first IP address
available... which might have been used by a different laptop
yesterday.
How you work that out depends on your OS.
>(2) I have a printer (not wireless capable) HP PSC1610 that I would like to
>connect so I can print from any of the connected laptops. This printer has
>a USB connection and a CAT5 connection. Is it possible for me to setup the
>printer to do this? I guess I will need a print server? Most simple print
The spec sheet I found for an HP PSC1610 didn't say anything
about ethernet connectivity, and listed only USB 1.1.
Regardless, even if it does have an ethernet interface, you will
want the facilities of a print spooler. Wireless print servers
are pretty economical, so it would be an easy to add and very
flexible hardware configuration (because you can then put the
printer virtually anywhere).
>servers I see has a CAT5 connection and a USB connection. So my guess is I
>will take it near one of the three wired locations, plug the CAT5 cable into
>the print server and then connect the print server to the printer's using a
>USB cable? Will something like this model work?
That is certainly one way to do it, and I would assume that
virtually any USB/Ethernet server would work just fine. If
it is convenient to locate the printer near one of the existing
wired locations there would be no advantage to using a wireless
print server.
>http://cgi.ebay.com/Linksys-PSUS4-Pr...QQcmdZViewItem
>
>http://cgi.ebay.com/LINKSYS-PRINT-SE...QQcmdZViewItem
>
>So the arrangement will be that I have three laptops connected wirelessly to
>the router, and the print server connected to one of the wired ports, and
>the printer to the print server.
>
>Will then all the laptops be able to see the print server and print to it?
Yes. The typical way all of these wireless "routers" with 4
ethernet ports and a WLAN port work is that the 4 LAN ports and
the wireless port are actually on an Ethernet switch. That
means there is no routing between them (and hence no firewall),
and they can all see each other. All of the routing (and
firewall ability) is between the WLAN port and all of the
others, which protects your LAN from the Internet.
--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska)
(E-Mail Removed)